Inertial range turbulence in kinetic plasmas
Abstract
The transfer of turbulent energy through an inertial range from the driving scale to dissipative scales in a kinetic plasma followed by the conversion of this energy into heat is a fundamental plasma physics process. A theoretical foundation for the study of this process is constructed, but the details of the kinetic cascade are not well understood. Several important properties are identified: (a) the conservation of a generalized energy by the cascade; (b) the need for collisions to increase entropy and realize irreversible plasma heating; and (c) the key role played by the entropy cascade--a dual cascade of energy to small scales in both physical and velocity space--to convert ultimately the turbulent energy into heat. A strategy for nonlinear numerical simulations of kinetic turbulence is outlined. Initial numerical results are consistent with the operation of the entropy cascade. Inertial range turbulence arises in a broad range of space and astrophysical plasmas and may play an important role in the thermalization of fusion energy in burning plasmas.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0711.4358,
title = {Inertial range turbulence in kinetic plasmas},
author = {G. G. Howes},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0711.4358},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
11 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Physics of Plasmas, DPP Meeting Special Issue